Techniques of Medication.

Abstract

Nothing pertaining to the methodology of medication has been omitted from this book; that is at once its chief virtue and its greatest defect.

The authors properly emphasize the growing complexity of modern therapeutics, but for that very reason it may no longer be possible to write a book of equal value for "physicians, medical students, interns, nurses and pharmacists." Since the emphasis is on the how and not the why of medication this volume may not be really competitive, at this price, with some of the textbooks of therapeutics in the respective disciplines.